Taste and smell of the tomatoes
- 152watt LED fixture produced really sweet and lovely tasting tomatoes, the little ones were a bit tart and sharp, and overall the tomatoes didn’t have much of an aroma
- 219watt LED fixture again produced really sweet and lovely tasting tomatoes, the little ones were a bit tart and sharp, and the tomatoes didn’t have much of an aroma
- 680watt HID fixture produced nice sweet tasting tomatoes, although they didn’t have much of an aroma
- Conclusion: The HID tomato had a slightly stronger aroma than both the LED lamps, but both the LED lamp tomatoes had a much better flavour and a sweeter taste.
Conclusions
I expected the plant grown under the 680watt HID fixture, would have heavier feed/watering requirements than the LED fixtures surprisingly this was not the case. On average during the first 6 weeks of flowering the tomato plant under each LED fixture, needed watering every 48 hours with 600ml of solution, whereas the HID fixture was every 60 hours with 600ml of solution.
The plants grew quicker and more vigorously under the LED fixtures as can be seen in the timelapse video, and I believe this is why they had a higher feed/watering requirement than the plant grown under the HID lamp.
The plant grown under the HID produced a more uniform sized tomato. The ratio of larger tomatoes under this lamp when compared to the LED fixtures was higher. Because everything else was pretty much the same as the 219watt LED in terms of light delivered to the plant, but the only significant difference was the spectrum therefore my assumption is spectral output could have played a role in the higher uniformity rate, although this theory would need to be tested over a much larger sample to see if it holds up.
The LED grown tomatoes with their beyond PAR spectrum not only out-yielded the HID lamp but they using less light and they also produced a far better tasting crop. So clearly in the case of this experiment spectrum is very important to the optimisation process.
Note: I have noticed this with other beyond PAR spectrum's and I will post the datasheets of those I have previously tested in the coming days when I get some time.
I am sure if those of you who have switched from HID to LED think back then you will likely remember what the quality of your HID crop was like vs your LED crop and I am sure you will come to the conclusion that a fuller spectrum produces better quality ...but do not take my word for it run your own experiments and see for yourselves.